Bruce Springsteen’s name is known the world over.
However, that doesn’t stop some people from getting it wrong.
One of the most common mispronunciations of Springsteen’s name is “Springstein.”
The mistake popped up a long time ago and still routinely happens, he told the audience Sunday at the USC Shoah Foundation’s 30th anniversary Ambassadors for Humanity gala in New York.
“I actually was Bruce Springstein for the first year or two of my career,” he said at the Oct. 13 event, per a People report. “Everywhere I went — I pull up to the club. ‘Welcome Bruce Springstein.’ This happened as late as a month ago. I’m not joking.”
While Springsteen has been mistaken for having a Jewish-sounding name, he grew up Catholic in Freehold. His family is of Irish, Dutch and Italian ancestry.
Springsteen, 75, performed at the gala hosted by the USC Shoah Foundation — The Institute for Visual History and Education, a nonprofit founded by Steven Spielberg in 1994. He dedicated his performance to Spielberg and his wife, Kate Capshaw.
The Shoah Foundation records and collects video interviews with survivors of the Holocaust. Its archive includes testimonies from Holocaust survivors as well as survivors of and people connected to the Armenian genocide and other atrocities.

Steven Spielberg, Bruce Springsteen and Kate Capshaw at the USC Shoah Foundation's 30th anniversary Ambassadors for Humanity gala.Kevin Mazur | Getty Images
More than 60 Holocaust survivors attended the gala.
“The work of collecting the personal testimony and the voices of those who’ve witnessed history has just something in common with the work that songwriters, filmmakers, all artists do to understand and to create our real and imagined worlds,” Springsteen said at the event, which was also attended by Jersey celebrities like Whoopi Goldberg and Meryl Streep. “We follow the ghosts of history. We listen for the voices of the past to take us into the future, and we lean into their stories and we listen to them.”
Streep, 75, also spoke at the gala (see video below).
“Eighty-plus years after the Holocaust, the spoken words of the survivors are more crucially important than ever to bring us face to face with what hate can do and where it can lead us,” she said. “To remind us of the consequences if we do nothing, and to keep alive the memory of what actually happened, not just to chronicle the unspeakable acts of the past, but to inspire us.”
Stories by Amy Kuperinsky
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Amy Kuperinsky may be reached at akuperinsky@njadvancemedia.com and followed at @AmyKup.

